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Saturday Siblings ~ The Appendix Brothers

In 2012, Thomas and Ryley had appendicitis. Tommy said goodbye to his on Flag Day. Ryley kicked his to the curb on Halloween. I was a nervous mama on Thanksgiving and Christmas. Luckily, the remaining nine appendixes are still in place and doing what appendixes do. Tommy and Ryley have this shared experience and it means something to them. They compare notes: “I barfed a lot!” “I didn’t!” They had the same surgeon, the same hospital, and the same bizarre advice at the two-week post-op checkup.

“Don’t forget you had your appendix out!” The surgeon said sometimes people forget. These two won’t. Neither will I.

The Appendix Brothers ~ Two Dudes Without Superfluous Organs ~ Halloween 2012

(WHOA, Ryley’s hair was long. Kid was a Sasquatch)

Entertainment for your Ides of March Party

Aren’t we mothers supposed to make fabric banners and cupcakes for ever major, minor, and pointless holiday on the calendar? Pinterest is fueled by the desire to commemorate every blazing day by making a themed craft or food. For the Ides of March, I propose red velvet cupcakes topped with fondant daggers. Have your whole family dress in togas as you beat a Soothsayer pinata. Make Et Tu, Brute? Etouffee, a lively shrimp dish seasoned with betrayal. What does shrimp have to do with ancient Romans and Shakespeare’s rendition of long-ago events? NOTHING. What does Lucky Charms cereal have to do with the venerable St. Patrick of Ireland? We mothers don’t have to make sense. We just have to look good not making sense.

About a year and a half ago, I caught Sam, Joel, and Beatrix staging Julius Caesar using their Webkinz. Sam read the lines, Joel and Beatrix would repeat them back. I captured some of it on video. I should have held my phone horizontally. I know this now and have mended my ways. If you aren’t into watching 2 minutes of children saying lines from Shakespeare, check out the video from about 1:00 to 1:15 for my favorite part.

If you can’t see the video, refresh the page or go to this link.

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My newest A Deeper Family post is up today. It’s about how my boys learned about vasectomies, thanks to Tom Bergeron.

Green Roses and Taco Sauce ~ St. Patrick’s Day with Steve Spangler Science

Last weekend was snowy and cold outside. If there was any green to be seen, it was buried under the sopping spring-like snow. But inside, conditions were perfect for playing around with ideas from Steve Spangler’s St. Patrick’s Day Experiment Guide. It’s a downloadable guide packed with experiments and simple, but fun activities. Kids can learn the secrets of the leprechauns and devise ways to capture one of the little mischievous guys.

You may know Steve Spangler from his appearances on Ellen. His ideas are highly entertaining and make science accessible. We had a good time transforming regular roses into something seasonable. The guide calls for using carnations, but the store was out of carnations. I wasn’t sure roses would work, but we learned otherwise. The principles of flower structure are universal.

White Roses

~BEFORE~

~AFTER~

Beatrix was delighted that it worked! She was amazed and proud because she was the main helper in charge of our Leprechaun flowers.

Another activity we did was shining coins to lure leprechauns. We all know they love coins, especially clean shiny coins. How to clean them? They’re looking pretty dirty. Hmmmm.

~BEFORE~

~DURING~

My coin-polishing guy went a little overboard with the unusual cleaner, but it smelled good and made me hungry. I promise this worked. Why don’t I have an illustrative photo? Because when we were rinsing the coins, they dropped down the drain and I ended up having to stick my hand into the garbage disposal and fish them out and then they were kind of gross and my hand was gross and then I got distracted. The pennies are now on my microwave in a shiny little stack.

St. Patrick’s Day is this weekend. You and your kids can get started right now with your own holiday fun because the guide is only $5 and is downloadable. You’ll have it forever and many of the ideas can be adapted for other fun times or just messing around in your kitchen. The guide teaches:

~Air movement and Bernoulli’s principle – The Leprechaun Bag
~Light and refraction – Rainbow Glass and Leprechaun Eggs
~Plants and movement of water – Color Changing Carnations (or Roses!)
~Polymers and water absorption – Leprechaun Snow and Green Worms
~Design and fine motor skills – Leprechaun Footprints and Leprechaun Trap
~Chemistry – Leprechaun Rainbow Milk and Leprechaun Treasure Polish
~pH (acids and bases) – Magical Leprechaun Cabbage
~Ultraviolet light and UV-reactive pigment – Rainbow Beads
~Air movement and vacuums – Leprechaun Breakfast
~Non-Newtonian fluids – Green Quicksand

There is a companion kit packed with science supplies, but you don’t need it. There is so much cool stuff in it that you might want to have it on hand for your own snowy or rainy days all year long.

(Steve Spangler Science provided our family with the downloadable guide to check out. I chose the activities and the opinions are ours.)